That same night, Charles and Elaine Whitmore arrived at our home.
Elaine dropped her handbag the moment she saw Ethan. “Those eyes,” she whispered. “He looks exactly like Thomas.”
Charles opened an old velvet box containing the other half of the walnut bracelet. Ethan took his piece from his pocket. The broken edges fit perfectly.
“My grandson,” Charles wept.
I stepped back, thinking my place in Ethan’s life was ending.
But Elaine came to me, took my hands, and bowed her head.
“Rebecca,” she cried, “you raised our family’s lost child into a good man. You are not a stranger. You are our savior.”
Charles bowed to me too. “We owe you more than we can ever repay.”
A week later, they invited us to the Whitmore estate in Lake Forest for the family trust ceremony. I planned to stay quietly in the background.
Ethan placed a coat over my shoulders. “If you’re not beside me, their name means nothing.”
In the courtyard, Charles’s younger brother Grant blocked our way.
He looked me over with disgust. “So this is the babysitter. I’ll send you thirty thousand dollars. Wait in the car. You don’t belong in a family trust meeting.”
The word cut deeply. I stepped back.
Ethan slapped the check from Grant’s hand.
“This woman is my mother,” Ethan said. “She sold jewelry, skipped meals, and gave her life for me. If this family requires me to abandon her, I don’t want the fortune.”
Grant raised his hand.
Before he could strike, Charles hit him across the face with his cane.
“How dare you insult the woman who saved my bloodline?” Charles roared. “Rebecca is my daughter. She is our hero.”
Inside the mansion, I was seated in the front row.
Ethan stood before the family.
“I honor the people who gave me life,” he said. “But I will dedicate my life to the woman who raised me. Grandpa, I ask your blessing to use the name Ethan Harper Whitmore, in tribute to my mother.”
Charles cried as he answered, “Granted.”
Months later, Ethan did not use his inheritance for luxury cars or parties. He placed documents on my dining table.
“I created the Rebecca and Ethan Harper Foundation,” he said. “It will fund surgeries for children with rare diseases and protect pregnant women in crisis. No child should ever be stolen or abandoned in the cold again.”
I looked at him with pride too deep for words.
Meanwhile, Marcus read the newspaper headline about billionaire heir Ethan Harper Whitmore from prison. The shock triggered a stroke. He spent the rest of his days in a wheelchair, trapped inside the ruins of his own lies.
As for us, one cool autumn afternoon in Lincoln Park, Dr. Ethan Harper Whitmore started the old Jeep Wrangler I used to drive when he was little.
He opened the passenger door for me and grinned. “Hop in, Mom. We’re getting pastrami on rye, then driving by the skyline.”